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Yes, but.... it would take a LOT of fuel to do! For practical purposes, the answer is no. No spacecraft built can carry enough fuel to significantly change its orbit.
What ever the spelling. The Sun does not orbit the Earth.
Jupiter does not orbit the earth. It takes 11.86 years for Jupiter to orbit the sun.
Yes a rocket usually has 2 or more stages, to take off, a lot of fuel is required, after reaching the required orbit, carryin so much extra fuel would be a burden so before the rocket settles in the orbit, 1 or more stages maybe removed
it takes 1 year for the earth to orbit the sun
365days
It can take as long as you want; if we ever get around to building a Beanstalk (aka space elevator) you *could* literally walk up to orbit. The limits are how much stress (in terms of G-forces) your payload can take and how much fuel your rocket can carry (and remember that you need fuel to get that fuel to fly). Although Project Orion proposed using nuclear bombs as propulsion, rather than rockets, but that's not something you want to use in Earth's atmosphere. Anyway, assuming limitless weightless fuel (which is kind of impossible), a rocket could climb at one inch per second and eventually make orbit; the problem is that in the real world there ain't no such animal. Short answer: NASA's Space Shuttle typically took eight to ten minutes to reach orbit.
Basically the Shuttle transforms fuel into altitude for a given mass. An empty shuttle could be lofted higher, but what would be the point? So, the limiting factor is mainly the amount of fuel it can carry. PS, Of course there are other complications, like how high a velocity it can take on reentry, how much fuel it carries for slowing itself down to get out of orbit, etc.
365 days.
Saturn does NOT orbit the Earth ! It orbits the SUN every 29.5 years.
Saturn does NOT orbit the Earth ! It orbits the SUN every 29.5 years.
Space shuttles are not equipped to go on long distance voyages, nor can they hold enough fuel. shuttles are mostly used for travel to and from the International Space Station and low earth orbit. If you had an infinite supply of fuel and you could just rocket in a strait path while Uranus is at the closest point in its orbit it would only take a bit over a year. Unfortunately, you have to factor in the gravitational pull of surrounding bodies and as previously stated the limited amount of fuel. so it would be much much longer.